Ohio speeding up road projects with turnpike bonds

JOHN SEEWER
Associated PressPublished: July 22, 2013 3:19PM

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) -- Highway and bridge construction projects that likely would have been on the shelf for a decade or longer across Ohio are moving to the front of the line now that the state is going forward with Gov. John Kasich's plan to use the Ohio Turnpike to raise money for roadwork.

Money from the sale of bonds will jump-start 27 transportation projects in northern Ohio over the next two years and will free up cash for another 14 projects in central and southern Ohio. All told, it adds up to about $3 billion in road projects over the next six years, Kasich announced Monday.

"The projects are all high-priority projects for each of the regions," said Greg Murphy, chief of staff for the Ohio Department of Transportation. "Some they've been waiting on for decades."

The wide-ranging list of construction projects will touch all corners of the state and will include plans for adding lanes on several interstate highways and rebuilding several congested interchanges.

Work is slated to begin in 2014 or the next year on most of the 41 projects. Final approval is still needed from a state panel that oversees funding for high-cost transportation work.

Lawmakers signed off this year on the governor's proposal to cash in on the turnpike. The state will raise about $1 billion through bond sales backed by future toll revenues.

Kasich said Ohio will be able to move forward with a large number of road projects at a time when other states are raising taxes or struggling to keep up with needed work. He said improving the state's infrastructure will also make it more attractive to businesses and will bring jobs to the state.

"It means we're going to be a much stronger economic artery for America," he said.

The projects include:

-- The addition of a third lane along Interstate 75 in Toledo and rebuilding an interchange at Interstate 475 and U.S. 20 in Lucas County.

-- Construction of a second inner-belt bridge near downtown Cleveland and widening Interstates 77 and 271 in Cuyahoga County.

-- Rebuilding the Interstate 70 and 71 interchange in Columbus and the Interstate 270 and U.S. 33 interchange in Franklin County.

-- Widening Interstate 75 in Hamilton County and building a new interchange at Interstate 71 and Martin Luther King Drive in Cincinnati.

Nearly three dozen multimillion-dollar road projects slated for the coming years were put on hold or delayed in early 2012 because the state's transportation department said there wasn't enough money.